Hurricane season a dud.....again!!

skookerasbil

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Aug 6, 2009
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Not the middle of nowhere
Actually...…..a joke. And of course, you get the Captain Obvious statement from the NOAA, "....but the signs for the future are ominous......warm waters....."

Well duh.....only suckers would fall for that. One of these days, they'll be right.....but plant the seed now linking it to climate change!! Its a cant miss...….:eusa_dance::eusa_dance::eusa_dance:. Only the bozos we see come in this forum will end up saying, "See...…..see!!":fingerscrossed::fingerscrossed:

https://finance.yahoo.com/news/busy-hurricane-season-does-less-130000694.html

As we know by now though, most of the public see's through the rigged/choreographed process of setting the stage ahead of time. A lot of the climate crusaders know its all about the fakery...…...but some actually embrace the bag of dog doo hook, line and stinker.:funnyface:. There are 3 or 4 regular's in here who get perpetually bamboozled.

Can you figure out who they are??:iyfyus.jpg:
 
And everyone in the Bahamas agrees with you.

Hurricanes happen....one of those facts of life!! Its almost unfathomable that The Bahamas went that long of a time without a direct hit!!

The AGW crowd went full on bomb thrower mode after Katrina....the world would end with non-stop Cat 5's. The same bozos never want to talk about that these days!:flirtysmile4:
 
And everyone in the Bahamas agrees with you.
The most recent U.S. National Climate Assessment concluded: “there is still low confidence that any reported long-term (multidecadal to centennial) increases in [tropical cyclone] activity are robust, after accounting for past changes in observing capabilities [which is unchanged from the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change Fifth Assessment Report (IPCC AR5) assessment statement].
 
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Thanksgiving weather: An 'unprecedented' storm is hitting the West Coast as another continues to pile snow on the Midwest

~S~
 
Interesting, in that over the past fifteen years since this article was written, we have seen exactly what it predicted both in the Atlantic, and in the Pacific.

Increasing destructiveness of tropical cyclones over the past 30 years
Nature volume 436, pages686–688(2005)Cite this article

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Abstract
Theory1 and modelling2 predict that hurricane intensity should increase with increasing global mean temperatures, but work on the detection of trends in hurricane activity has focused mostly on their frequency3,4 and shows no trend. Here I define an index of the potential destructiveness of hurricanes based on the total dissipation of power, integrated over the lifetime of the cyclone, and show that this index has increased markedly since the mid-1970s. This trend is due to both longer storm lifetimes and greater storm intensities. I find that the record of net hurricane power dissipation is highly correlated with tropical sea surface temperature, reflecting well-documented climate signals, including multi-decadal oscillations in the North Atlantic and North Pacific, and global warming. My results suggest that future warming may lead to an upward trend in tropical cyclone destructive potential, and—taking into account an increasing coastal population—a substantial increase in hurricane-related losses in the twenty-first century.
 
Another article;


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The increasing intensity of the strongest tropical cyclones
Nature volume 455, pages92–95(2008)Cite this article

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Abstract
Atlantic tropical cyclones are getting stronger on average, with a 30-year trend that has been related to an increase in ocean temperatures over the Atlantic Ocean and elsewhere1,2,3,4. Over the rest of the tropics, however, possible trends in tropical cyclone intensity are less obvious, owing to the unreliability and incompleteness of the observational record and to a restricted focus, in previous trend analyses, on changes in average intensity. Here we overcome these two limitations by examining trends in the upper quantiles of per-cyclone maximum wind speeds (that is, the maximum intensities that cyclones achieve during their lifetimes), estimated from homogeneous data derived from an archive of satellite records. We find significant upward trends for wind speed quantiles above the 70th percentile, with trends as high as 0.3 ± 0.09 m s-1 yr-1 (s.e.) for the strongest cyclones. We note separate upward trends in the estimated lifetime-maximum wind speeds of the very strongest tropical cyclones (99th percentile) over each ocean basin, with the largest increase at this quantile occurring over the North Atlantic, although not all basins show statistically significant increases. Our results are qualitatively consistent with the hypothesis that as the seas warm, the ocean has more energy to convert to tropical cyclone wind.
 
But nobody is caring......

And the loose association terminology of "increased intensity" is fake....operationally defined, it is insignificant. The only people moved by such information are the suckers who think "bigger dick" pills make your dick bigger!!!

:113::cul2::113::cul2:

My God.....this forum is a hoot. Progressives just place the pumpkin right on the tee for you then hand you the bat too!:fingerscrossed::fingerscrossed:
 

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